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And The Stiffs Just Keep On Comin'

Then there was "You Ought To Be Having Fun" by ToP...another turntable wonder.

Was there a follow-up to "Boots" by Nancy Sinatra? Well....yeah. And SO appropriate for this board...it was called "In Our Time" and contained the requisite drug and sex references. All kinds of groovy 60s hipster references and jargon. A real dog that's aged about as well as "Three's Company" re-runs.

Actually, Nancy went on to have some pretty decent hits in the later 60s including the #1-charting duo with daddy Frank, "Something Stupid," in '67 plus "Some Velvet Morning" and a cover of June Carter Cash's country evergreen "Jackson" with Lee Greenwood. (Yes. Nancy Sinatra had a kinda-country phase.)
 
Here's another one from stiff file...

"Cant Find the Time" by The Rose Colored Glass....cheesy 1971 studio band remake of the 1968 Orpheus original (which was considered to be a bit of a stiff itself). Lead singer was so awful....couldn't sing for squat
 
I'm still amazed at the things you can turn up on the internet.

Even "real" stiffs like this one (it failed to crack the Top 40 in 1968, #44)...The Cherry People from Washington, DC - "And Suddenly".

ww.youtube.com/watch?v=2dQ6PoQu_Ho
 
Stiff or not, I loved Lee and Nancy's version of Ladybird when it first came out.

Other great Nancystiffs are "Sugartown" and 'Your Groovy Self" from the movie Speedway, with Elvis.

I think as a 4 year old I had a crush on Nancy Sinatra.
Of course when I was 5 Lee Merriweather as Catwoman showed up, and distracted me greatly. ::)
 
There's a 30 foot mahogany bar in the basement of Big Ronda's Cheektowaga ranch. The word is, it came from a bar in Black Rock before it was "remodeled" by a home improvement company outside the family. Uncle Oskie was none too pleased when he heard that Big didn't hire his second cousin to do the job, but there was a reason.

Big is actually Zbigniew. Ronda is some amalgam of the family's real last name. And the remodeling project was never finished because the guys who were tearing up the linoleum had an accident with a torch while stripping old linoleum. So the story goes. Proabably why Big hired some mooks from Black Rock to do the remodeling job rather than his cousin Oscar. Some things are best kept outside the family.

Other remnants from the bar found their way to Big's basement before the fire, including a 300 Watt Crown amplifier, mixing board, two turntables, a big, ugly Onkyo reel to reel deck and four Altec Lansing Voice of the Theatre speakers. Four. Two would be enough. Four is overkill.

Not so long ago, the basement was full of friends and relatives who gathered for some kind of anniversary and the sound system was in fine form. The old Crown amp and speakers sounded robust and unstrained.

Longtime family friend, trumpet player and ex-bar DJ Eddie "Moobs" Mubella was playing the tunes. Unless he's known you for at least 20 years, when he was an Acounting major at Canisius and member of ROTC, it's best not to call him "Moobs," as it has a whole different meaning than it did when somebody hung the nickname on him as a kid. And since Eddie is a CPA, goes about 220 at more than six feet, only longtime friends get to use the nickname. For the most part, "Eddie" works just fine with him.

As Jimmy Soul sings "If you wanna be happy for the rest of your life..." the assembled family clan is in a good mood. Eddie gets on the mic and says "hey Frankie, this song is for you and Wanda!" Frankie used to play bass in Eddie's band, is a longtime friend and member of the Knights of Columbus. Everybody laughs loudly. Wanda is anything but ugly, and she's not what you'd call quiet, either. Willie the Tagger is present, a cousin of a cousin or something like that. He's shaved, wearing khakis, not buzzed on a nickel bag of hippie lettuce and in fine form. He yells, "except Wanda can't cook, either... just ask those guys at the Knights of Columbus who ate her omelet delight!" More laughs as Frankie mimes somebody blowing lunch.

At the end of the night, cousin Kenny who's about 40 ("one of the kids" as Uncle Oskie likes to say) tells Eddie Moobs, "you did a great job... how come we don't hear these songs on the radio anymore?"

I felt like shouting back, "because we're all too damn old!" But I didn't. And then, of all things, this meandering thread pops into my head.

Considering all the posts here, songs that never get played, songs that shouldn't be played, turntable hits, forgotten 45s, B-Sides, personal faves and songs that deserve to be played, the reality is, these songs likely will never again be heard again on the radio in a format.

To be truthful, Eddie Moobs played all kinds of songs that evening, from "Mac the Knife," to "Get Down On It," to Ton Loc's "Wild Thing" backed to the Troggs version, to Skynyrd's "I Know A Little," to "It's A Beautiful Day" by U2.

Such a thing would never work on the radio. It would be "Trainwreck Radio."

What I think Kenny meant was, why aren't songs like the Shirelles', "Baby It's You" (the beginning of which has that haunting "Sha-lal-la-la-la-la" in the intro) "Daytripper" by the Beatles, the Stones classic, "Get Off My Cloud" and "Big Girls Don't Cry" played on the radio?

Fair question, Kenny. The answer is, "it's old people's music."

But guess what, so is Classic Rock. How many years before that format meets the same resistance as Oldies did about five years ago. As I read this thread, maybe it should have been given the name "Songs We'll Never Hear Again On The Radio Again" when the first beer-soaked post was made a while back.

BTW, if it hasn't already been posted, I'll nominate "Sweet Cream Ladies" by the Box Tops.

---

PS, How come the emoticons don't work?
 
Radknowski, your story sounds as though you must have been with my family and friends when we all had a good time in my aunt's basement. Not exactly what you could call an old fogey's convention, even though the aunt and uncle, parents and neighbors were all "old". We used to get thrown out of the basement for all twelve days of Christmas, with the exception of Christmas Day itself but we could hear the old record player with its jazz and swing. Other holidays her basement was a gathering place for all, and in the summer it was the basement and under the deck just outside the basement door, where my aunt personally rigged up speakers that somehow weathered all seasons under there.

One of my favorite tunes from the "old people's party" was Louis Armstrong's "Cheesecake". Posted is his appearance and performance of "Cheesecake" on Bing Crosby's show in 1967.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ainGwdBlbes
 
Hmmm... activity has quieted down the past couple of days on this thread, so as a little break from the news of the day I submit a blast from the past, a true stiff peaking at somewhere around #96 on the charts in 1964,

The Spats - Gator Tails & Monkey Ribs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=So2bNsaGek4

...and now, back to the countdown.
 
SirRoxalot said:
JimMcGrath said:
Was there a stiff connected with " These Boots Were Made for Walkin' " by Nancy Sinatra ? Or did she quit while ahead?

Don't forget about "Jackson", her duet with Lee Hazlewood. Here you go, complete with cheezy video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xF3m58p8DeI

Great video! For some reason I got into a Nancy Sinatra/Lee Hazlewood mood the other day and bought Jackson from iTunes. I remember when I bought the 45! I intended to buy "You Only Live Twice" and thought for a sec I had picked up the wrong record until I looked at the other side! A double sided hit! Although todays programmers don't seem to share that opinion. "Some Velvet Morning" is up there too:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gbadg5BAb1E&feature=related
 
Gettin' your youth on with Nancy Sinatra, eh Mike? ;) Anybody mention the Tweeds, "Thing of the Past" on Coral Records, featuring a young Dave Constantino and Billy Sheehan, later integral performers with Talas and Mr. Big?
 
JimPastrick said:
Gettin' your youth on with Nancy Sinatra, eh Mike? ;) Anybody mention the Tweeds, "Thing of the Past" on Coral Records, featuring a young Dave Constantino and Billy Sheehan, later integral performers with Talas and Mr. Big?

You betcha Jim, Ahhh Nancy! My problem is I started listening to the radio and collecting records when I was very young. My musical taste skews a bit older than most people my age.

I attended a wedding in Chicago last fall and being curious set the radio to Real Oldies WLS-FM. The groom's daughter and her friend rode with us to the rehearsal and the wedding. Not once did they ask me to change the station, these early 20's girls were listening and singing along. So I know the songs are old but if you don't play the same 15 songs over and over, it can work.
 
Well, there are those spoken-word perennial favorites: Red Skelton's pledge of allegiance; John Wayne's "America, Why I Love Her"; and Gordon Sinclair's "The Americans."
 
Ed Trefzger said:
Well, there are those spoken-word perennial favorites: Red Skelton's pledge of allegiance; John Wayne's "America, Why I Love Her"; and Gordon Sinclair's "The Americans."

A Deck of Cards - Wink Martindale or any of the others who recorded it.
 
Or the incredible, timeless "America The Beautiful" from Ray Charles.

Let's all pause this Memorial Day to remember - with reverence - those who died to keep us free, able to express ourselves over the airwaves, able to reminisce and commune fraternally on internet message boards, and to love our families, each other, and our business.

Let's all give heartfelt thanks to God that we're Americans.
 


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